You mean ill do it manual for 100s transaction. Is that correct? How can i
transfer in fastest way

On Fri, Aug 25, 2023, 7:01 AM Stephen M. Butler <kg...@arrl.net> wrote:

> I have used the CSV importer several times to great advantage.  At a
> minimum you need the following columns:
>
> 1.  Date -- be sure that you set the importer to the date format you
> used.  I use MM/DD/YYYY.
> 2.  Description -- What you want in the transaction description.
> 3.  Account Code -- Something that will uniquely identify the "other
> account".  I tend to use 3-4 character (sometime just 2) codes easy for
> me to remember.  These will get mapped (by you) to the real GnC account
> during the import process.
> 4.  Amount -- I sometimes have to specify that this is a negative amount
> (even though the file has positive values).
>
> During the import you will have to specify the base account.  This will
> be the checking account.  This is a field on the import screen -- not in
> your file.
> At some point you will map the above fields to tell the imported which
> one is the date, which one is the Other Account, which one is the
> description and which one is the amount (or negative amount).
>
> Test this out in a test environment first.
>
> Save all your mapping to a file name so you can pull it back up for real
> (or for future use).  It is there on the setup screen.
>
> At some point you will have the setup all done and will go NEXT.  At
> this point it will list all the codes you used and ask you to map those
> to the real accounts (I presume expenses).
>
> Good luck.
>
> On 8/24/23 15:00, Stan Brown (using GC 4.14) wrote:
> > On 2023-08-24 14:15, jackielou wong wrote:
> >> I have 500 transactions under checking account for importing files...
> how
> >> can i put this all in linked accounts...
> >>
> >> Everytime i do that they fall to imbalance usd.. can you help to fix
> it. So
> > Jackielou,
> >
> > This suggestion may seem inefficient, but I think you might get the job
> > done faster by just entering the 500 transactions manually, which I
> > imagine you know how to do.
> >
> > I've never done an import myself, but as I understand it you have to
> > teach GnuCash to recognize transactions the way you want. That takes
> > time, which you could be using to enter transactions right into GC, a
> > process I assume you are comfortable with. And 500 is really not many.
> >
> > That's what I did in early 2018 when I converted my 2011-2017 data to
> > GC. It was over 15,000 transactions, but once I got going it went very
> > quickly. Sure, I had to deal with each transaction individually, but I
> > would have had to check each one anyway if I had tried an import. And
> > along the way, I noticed inconsistencies in how I had treated similar
> > events, and fixed them. For me, at least, the process was less painful
> > than spending a lot of time learning and tinkering with a batch import
> > process that I would probably never need to use again.
> >
> > If you still want to pursue importing, I think it would be helpful if
> > you could be a lot more specific about what process you are following,
> > what results you see in GC, and what error message you get (if any).
> > Maybe import _one_ transaction, and provide that information?
> >
> > Stan Brown
> > Tehachapi, CA, USA
> > https://BrownMath.com/
> >
>
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